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I really think these new CrossfireX or Hybrid SLI is the way to go. Being able to put the most powerhungry thing in a PC to sleep is nice. But since Linux has no Crossfire support I'd go with NVidia...

Comment

I really think these new CrossfireX or Hybrid SLI is the way to go. Being able to put the most powerhungry thing in a PC to sleep is nice. But since Linux has no Crossfire support I'd go with NVidia...

I would like to add that Hybridpower (the nvidia feature that turns the dedicated graphics card off when not needing powerfull 3D) is only supported under Vista (not even XP!).
So it doesn't matter which brand you take, both don't support the dedicated graphics card poweroff feature under Linux.

Comment

I remember hearing till now that the hybrid graphics mode will work only when a supported card is used, and that both cards work in a way similar to standard crossfire. But about this power off feature: is it available on other cards as well ? I mean, lets say I get a 780G motherboard and a HD4850. Would the driver still work and turn off the HD4850 when its not needed or will it only happen with a supported HD34xx, HD35xx or HD46xx card ?

Edit: One more question:

I remember reading about the 780G mobile version on AMD website. I think this along with a low power processor like Athlon X2 4850e would make an excellent budget mobile platform. Or, paired with a mobile triple core phenom it can easily give the non overclockable intel mid range laptops a run for their money. Aren't such things done yet ?